Injury & Accident Lawyers
Why Hit and Run Penalties Fall Short
Written/Reviewed by:
Last Updated: May 5, 2026
When a driver kills a cyclist and flees the scene, most people assume the criminal penalties will be severe. In California, they’re often not. The gap between what the public expects and what the law allows can be jarring, especially for the families left behind.
A Cyclist Killed on PCH
In October 2025, a driver struck and killed 45-year-old Eric John Williams while he was cycling on Pacific Coast Highway in Huntington Beach. Two other riders were severely injured in the same crash, suffering spinal fractures, broken ribs, and a broken ankle. The driver, who allegedly fled the scene, was later charged with one felony count of hit and run causing permanent injury or death and two additional felony counts of hit and run with injury. As BikinginLA reported, the maximum sentence she faces is just five years and four months.
What California Law Actually Says
Under Vehicle Code Section 20001, a driver who leaves the scene of an accident involving injury or death can be charged with felony hit and run. But the statute is a “wobbler,” meaning it can be charged as either a felony or a misdemeanor depending on the circumstances.
Even when death results, the maximum felony sentence under Section 20001 is two, three, or four years in state prison. Additional counts can add time, but the total still often falls well below what other states impose.
Compare that to Florida, where a hit-and-run driver recently accepted a plea deal carrying up to 30 years for fleeing the scene of a fatal bicycle crash. California’s penalties don’t come close.
Why This Matters for Injured Cyclists and Their Families
Light criminal sentences don’t just feel unjust. They create a practical problem. When a driver faces minimal prison time for killing a cyclist and leaving the scene, it sends a signal that the consequences of fleeing aren’t proportional to the harm caused. Some advocates argue that California’s hit-and-run laws actually incentivize drivers to leave, since the penalties for fleeing can be lighter than the penalties for staying and facing a DUI charge.
For the families of victims and survivors dealing with catastrophic injuries, criminal prosecution alone rarely provides the relief they need. Criminal courts can impose restitution, but they don’t award compensation for pain and suffering, future medical needs, or the full financial loss a family endures.
That’s where a civil claim becomes essential.
What a Civil Claim Can Recover
A Culver City bicycle accident victim or the family of someone killed in a hit-and-run can file a separate civil lawsuit against the driver, regardless of the criminal case outcome. Civil claims aren’t limited by the same sentencing frameworks, and the types of compensation available are broader:
- Medical bills and ongoing treatment costs
- Lost income and future earning capacity
- Pain, suffering, and emotional distress
- Loss of companionship and household support in wrongful death cases
- Funeral and burial expenses
In civil court, the burden of proof is also lower. A plaintiff needs to show liability by a preponderance of the evidence, not beyond a reasonable doubt. That distinction matters, particularly in cases where criminal charges are reduced or result in a plea to lesser offenses.
When the Driver Can’t Be Found
Hit-and-run cases sometimes go unsolved. When the at-fault driver is never identified, injured cyclists may still have options through their own uninsured motorist coverage. California law allows UM claims for hit-and-run injuries, provided the claim is filed within a specific timeframe and meets certain evidentiary requirements.
Cohen Injury Law Group represents cyclists throughout Southern California who’ve been injured or lost a loved one in hit-and-run crashes, including cases where criminal penalties fell short of justice.
Holding Drivers Accountable Beyond Criminal Court
Criminal law has limits. Civil law exists to fill the gap. If you or your family has been affected by a Culver City bicycle accident involving a hit and run, a Culver City bicycle accident lawyer can help you pursue the full compensation you’re owed and hold the responsible driver accountable in ways the criminal system often can’t.
Calling us is
always free.
FREE Case Evaluation
- 1 Free Evaluation
- 2 We Build Your Case
- 3 Financial & Emotional Recovery
Office Locations
-
Santa Monica
2636 Lincoln Blvd
Santa Monica, CA 90405 -
Santa Monica – Broadway
520 Broadway, 2nd Floor
Santa Monica, CA 90401 -
Los Angeles
633 W 5th St, Unit 2876A
Los Angeles, CA 90071 -
Ventura
394 E Main St, Suite 302
Ventura, CA 93001
Schedule your no-cost consultation.